Veteran US TV journalist Jim Clancy has abruptly left the international news broadcaster after 34 years, following a seemingly tangential Twitter argument over Charlie Hebdo that escalated to a verbal war between Clancy and pro-Israel social media users.

“Jim Clancy is no longer
with CNN. We thank him for more than three decades of
distinguished service, and wish him nothing but the
best,”said a terse
statement from the Atlanta-headquartered network, which had sent
Clancy as a reporter to Beirut, London, and Berlin before making
him a senior anchor and contributor.

Although neither Clancy nor CNN revealed the reasons for the
departure, almost all media outlets connected it with a somewhat
incoherent Twitter spat that began in the wake of the fatal
attacks on Charlie Hebdo, the satirical French magazine.

“The cartoons NEVER mocked the Prophet. They mocked how the
COWARDS tried to distort his word. Pay attention,” tweeted
Clancy on January 7 – from an account that has since been deleted
– referring to the magazine’s editorial output.

.@clancycnn You might want to actually look at the cartoons
before tweeting about them. I have a collection: http://t.co/QSvVFHKqwM

The ironically-named anonymous pro-Israeli blogger Elder of
Ziyon, and Oren Kessler, a Jewish-American Middle East analyst,
both piped in with comments contradicting Clancy, saying that
there had been explicitly anti-religious cartoons, and reminding
the journalist that the magazine had been previously targeted by
Islamists.

The debate then took an odd turn, with Clancy tweeting “Hasbara”
– the name for Israel’s policy of spreading its message through
mass media.

“This is great, a pro-Israel voice try [sic] to convince us
that cartoonists were really anti-Muslim, and that’s why they
were attacked. FALSE. These accounts are part of a campaign to do
PR for Israel(including “Jews Making News”) but not HR (Human
Rights.),” read one tweet.

Despite being met with incomprehension, Clancy then mysteriously
tweeted “It's called satire” before launching into a
series of general anti-Israeli comments.

Several included mentions of Israeli officials being tried at the
International Criminal Court, as well as Israeli settlements – a
subject Clancy has covered extensively.

Perhaps the most offensive and telling tweet read “It’s my
Friday night” – this was actually a Wednesday – and said
“the Hasbara team need to pick on some cripple on the edge of
the herd.”

The seemingly unprovoked outpouring sparked the ire of the
Ruderman Family Foundation, a Jewish disabled people’s
foundation.

Its head, Jay Ruderman, wrote an open letter to CNN, calling
Clancy’s remarks “appalling” and asking why “in this
day and age a senior anchor at CNN, a world leader in the media,
would use a word such as ‘cripple,' which is a derogatory term
for people with disabilities.”

The moral of the Jim Clancy resignation has nothing to do with
Jews, contra @ggreenwald, but is as
follows: Don't drink and tweet.

More and more media outlets picked up on the story, and Clancy
first deleted several of the more inflammatory posts, and then
eventually his account. However, screenshots of the tweets had
been saved by Gawker and several other outlets.

By Friday, Clancy’s biography had been taken off the CNN website,
and the journalist wrote a goodbye letter, saying “CNN has been a
family to my own family,” and thanking it for providing
“great adventures and achievements.”